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Tag Archives: Videos
Investigating Truth with Web Tools
In a post on the Information Literacy @ CUNY blog, Maura Smale spotlights a video of a TED talk by journalist Markham Nolan that might be useful in our credit courses: How to Separate Fact and Fiction Online.
Nolan’s presentation touches on:
- the changing nature of journalism
- new techniques for factchecking
- authority of sources
- what does truth mean
- visual literacy
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Google Maps, Information literacy, Spokeo, TED, Videos
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Documentary about the Library of Congress
A CSPAN production that you can watch online.
via Celeripedian
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Library of Congress, Videos
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Tech Sharecase, 15 April 2011
Attendees
Stephen Francoeur, Ellen Kaufman, Louise Klusek, Jin Ma, Ryan Phillips
xtranormal
We checked out a number of library related videos created using the xtranormal service, which lets you create animations.
“Library School: Hurts So Good”
“My Rules for Using Law Library Reference”
Video Interviews of Baruch Professors
At the recent Baruch Teaching and Technology Conference, Keri Bertino from the Writing Center spoke about a project she’s undertaken with a peer tutor to interview Baruch faculty about what research looks like in their disciplines. The interviews are recorded and will eventually be available as videos. This teaser video gives a sense of what the content will be like in the final videos.
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/B4rFKgYComA" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]
Using Video to Evoke Critical Stances from Students
We talked about this news story from InsideHigherEd (“Calibrating Students’ B.S. Meters,”15 April 2011) that spotlights the work of librarians using videos in classrooms to engage students in critical thinking.
Mobile Library Websites
A recent blog post at iLibrarian featuring 7 ways to build a library website for mobile devices was discussed.
joli Cloud OS
Stephen showed his Dell Mini laptop that was running Joli OS instead of Windows. Joli is built on Ubuntu.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Information literacy, Joli OS, Mobil, Mobile library sites, mobile web development, Research methods, Student writing, Tech Sharecase, Ubuntu, Videos, xtranormal
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Baruch Faculty Members Modeling How They Research
I’m really excited by a project that the Writing Center is working on and that was previewed at today’s Teaching and Technology Conference. Keri Bertino and a student employee at the Writing Center have been editing a series of videotaped interviews they conducted with faculty members. In the interviews, the faculty members explain what research looks like in their discipline and talk about a specific exemplary work. Each faculty member answered a series of questions posed by the interviewers:
Purpose:
- Why do people write in your field?
- What kinds of questions are writers in your field trying to answer with their writing?
Form:
- What is the format or organization of a typical article in your field?
- What citation style does your field usually use?
Argument:
- How is an argument usually introduced in writing in your field?
- How is that argument usually developed?
Evidence/research:
- What kind of evidence or research is used in your field?
- How is this evidence, research, or data used?
- How is previous scholarship and research used in writing in your field?
- How might a writer in your field address existing or potential conflicting theories or arguments?
Voice:
- What kind of “voice” is appropriate to writing in your field?
- How might it be appropriate to insert the author’s point of view or experience into this writing?
Other:
- Are there any other characteristics or qualities of writing that seem typical of your field?
For students:
- What do you want a student to do and to learn when you ask them to write in your field?
- As they prepare to write, what questions should students ask themselves?
- What difficulties did you first encounter when writing in this field?
Once the videos are edited, they will be posted on the Writing Center website. I can imagine that these interviews could be really useful in our instructional efforts, as we try to help students understand what research really is in all its academic varieties. To give you a better sense of what this project is about, you may want to check out this teaser video made by Keri Bertino and her assistant in preparation for the presentation at today’s conference.
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/B4rFKgYComA" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]
A second video pulls together a sample of the responses that faculty gave to the questions and offers a nice preview of what the final videos will look like.
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/5CrGWG8FrBU" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]
Tech Sharecase, 22 October 2010
Attendees
Stephen Francoeur, Ellen Kaufman, Chris Tutill, Stella Varveris, Mike Waldman, Kevin Wolff
WorldCat Local Search Interface for CUNY+
The Newman Library is in the process of becoming a member of the IDS Project, a program that got its start among the SUNYs as a way to rethink resource sharing, interlibrary loan, and collection development workflows. Among its initiatives is IDS Search, a service that runs member library catalogs in WorldCat Local. You can try out these catalog search overlays on this IDS page.
The search overlay connects to the WorldCat API, Google Books, and other web services to create a richer search experience than is offered in our Aleph catalog interface. The overlay also features spell check and “did you mean” functions. The catalogs that are up now are in pre-alpha state; some issues with the data are already apparent.
One major local issue is that there is a four-month lag between when we add a record for a newly ordered item in Aleph and when we upload it to WorldCat. We do this because by 4 months we have received 90% of the Coutts books we have ordered (as a reminder these come already processed and cataloged which is why it takes the books the time it does to reach us). We wouldn’t want to put records for books we don’t have in WorldCat. However, sometimes we get newly ordered items well in advance of the usual 4 month window, but there is no good way to upload these items as they come in. This means that the WorldCat data will not feature items that Aleph may correctly indicate we have received because they came in before the usual 4-month delivery/processing time. This applies mostly to books received from Coutts; any cataloging that is done locally is updated at time of cataloging. Mike Waldman will be attending a meeting soon about IDS and will get back to us with more details on the project. Anyone interested in the project is welcome to attend as well.
Streaming Video
We talked about a new effort to stream videos from a Baruch server. The project allows us to embed a video player on a password-protected course-reserve page. Before we can make our own copy of a video to stream, we have to secure the license to do so, a process that can be complex. We also talked about UCLA’s decision this past spring to resume its practice of streaming of previously purchased videos without securing a license to do so.
Settings for Screecasting Software
We talked about using free and open-source software, CamStudio, for creating quick and dirty screencasts. At issue was what the ideal settings should be to ensure that when the files are uploaded to YouTube the picture is clear.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged CamStudio, Fair use, Google Books, IDS Project, OCLC, Streaming media, SUNY, Tech Sharecase, UCLA, Videos, WorldCat, WorldCat Local, YouTube
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Dreaming about the Future of the Book
The design team at IDEO just put out this video exploring three different models for ebooks that greatly expand on the concept of a “book.” I’m particularly intrigued by the first one, Nelson, which seems to embed a book into related discourses about it and the topics it covers.
The Future of the Book. from IDEO on Vimeo.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged E-books, Videos
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Tech Sharecase, 22 July 2010
Attendees
Janey Chao, Stephen Francoeur, Ellen Kaufman, Jim Livornese, Ryan Phillips, Linda Rath, Mike Waldman, Kevin wolff
LibGuides
We discussed Steven Bell’s study of LibGuides (pdf), which he presented at 16th Annual Reference Research Forum at the ALA Annual Meeting this year. Bell asked whether LibGuides help students do better research? The results of the student were inconclusive.
Gartner Research
On the CUNY Portal, we have limited subscription to Gartner Research (we do have access to the magic quadrant charts).
IT Needs for the Library
Jim Livornese asked us to talk about what IT needs the library has. Suggestions we discussed included:
- better, faster, more stable PCs at the ref desk (the best we can offer) that have dual monitors (one angled for the patron, another for the librarian) and speakers (so we can play videos to patrons as needed)
- digital signage
- longer period for guest logins (2 days? 3 days? 1 week?)
- better sense of who to contact in BCTC for what
- software that makes image on instructor’s classroom PC display on the student PCs
- multiple projection screens in the classrooms (and more whiteboards)
BCTC Projects
Jim Livornese ran through a list of projects that BCTC will be looking into or developing further: podcast producers, Boxee, iTunes U, media development, etc.
Videos
We watched the BYU video that was just released and parodies a recent ad campaign from Old Spice. Here is the BYU library video:
[kml_flashembed movie=”http://www.youtube.com/v/2ArIj236UHs” width=”425″ height=”350″ wmode=”transparent” /]
Here is the original Old Spice commercial:
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/uLTIowBF0kE" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]
It was noted that Yale and Middlebury have similarly well-produced videos for aimed at attracting applicants.
RSS Reader in Microsoft Office 2010
The new version of Outlook in Microsoft Office, which we are all getting in our desk PCs soon, has a RSS reader built in.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged ALA Annual, Assessment, BCTC, Gartner Research, Information technology, LibGuides, Microsoft Office, Microsoft Outlook, PCs, Reference services, RSS, Tech Sharecase, Videos
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New Feed for Posts AND Comments
I did the same thing with Yahoo! Pipes here that I did today for the Reference at Newman Library blog so you can subscribe to a feed that gives you all new posts and comments. If you’d like to see how I did it, I created a screencast and wrote step-by-step instructions on this post from my other personal blog, Stephen Francoeur’s Stuff.
Here’s the URL you can add to your feed reader for the new combined feed:
http://pipes.yahoo.com/pipes/pipe.run?_id=19704accb2e2d2d8f97de2ac204b75c6&_render=rss
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Blogging, Library blogs, RSS, Screencasts, Videos, Yahoo! Pipes
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Tech Sharecase, 18 June 2010
Attendees
Saad Abulhab, Joanna Cruz, Arthur Downing, Stephen Francoeur, Harold Gee, Joseph Hartnett, Ellen Kaufman, Wilcina Longdon, Jin Ma, Louisa Moy, Christina Muniz, Peter Philips, Ryan Phillips, Ester Ramos, Michael Waldman
Baruch iPhone App
We watched a screencast from the developer of the forthcoming iPhone app that is being designed for the Office of Student Development. There are placeholders in certain sections where library services and resources can be added. This app is being designed primarily as a student recruitment tool.
Microsoft Office 2010
If you are a faculty member, you can go to the CUNY Mall within the CUNY Portal and download for free the latest version of Microsoft Office, which was just released this week. The license is for home use only and not for work PCs. It is very possible that this fall, though, our work computers will get upgraded from Office 2003 to Office 2010. The 2010 version of Outlook (and the earlier 2007 version) has a built-in RSS reader, which will work once we get our Exchange server here on campus upgraded this summer.
Pew Report on Use of Social Media and Mobile Devices Among Teens
We took a quick look at the recently released report from the Pew Internet and America Life Project that about how teens use mobile devices and social media.
Online Education
This fall, the statistics department will use online course content developed by Carnegie Mellon’s Open Learning Initiative for its intro statistics course. We also discussed briefly the large library of video tutorials created by Salman Khan and published on YouTube. Over 1400 videos are available; most of the videos are about science, math, finance, economics. Here is a sample video on balance sheets:
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged CUNY Portal, iPhone, Microsoft Office, mobile phones, Mobile technology, Online social networking, Reports, RSS, Software, Tech Sharecase, Tutorials, Videos
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